29 April 2010

Knitting & Crochet Blog Week, Day 4

A New Skill
Is there a skill related to your hobby that you hope to learn one day? maybe you’re a crocheter who’d also like to knit? Maybe you’d like to learn to knit continental, knit backwards, try cables or attempt stranded colourwork. TAGGING CODE: knitcroblo4

I know how to do a little bit of stranded colorwork, but would like to get better at it and create my own patterns reminiscent of needlepoint. Maybe next winter.

Knitting & Crochet Blog Week, Day 3

One Great Knitter
Write about a knitter whose work (whether because of project choice, photography, styling, scale of projects, stash, etc) you enjoy. If they have an enjoyable blog, you might find it a good opportunity to send a smile their way. TAGGING CODE: knitcroblo3

Once again it would be my daughter in law Amy Maxwell. She comes up with the neatest ideas and patterns, and that in turn gets my own creativity flowing: Strand Over Fist

Knitting & Crochet Blog Week, Day 2

An Inspirational Pattern

Blog about a pattern or project which you aspire to. Whether it happens to be because the skills needed are ones which you have not yet acquired, or just because it seems like a huge undertaking of time and dedication, most people feel they still have something to aspire to in their craft. If you don’t feel like you have any left of the mountain of learning yet to climb, say so! TAGGING CODE: knitcroblo2

I would love to do traditional Aran knitting, and create the kinds of sweaters and afghans in natural fibers that I find endlessly appealing. I also would like to learn to knit with cotton in such a way as to keep it from getting stretched out of shape.

26 April 2010

The Knitting and Crochet Blog Week: 4/26-2/5 2010

Thought this would be a fun thing to participate in. Here's the mother post, at eskimimi knits.


Day One Topic:

Starting Out

How and when did you begin knitting/crocheting? was it a skill passed down through generations of your family, or something you learned from Knitting For Dummies? What or who made you pick up the needles/hook for the first time? Was it the celebrity knitting ‘trend’ or your great aunt Hilda? TAGGING CODE: knitcroblo1

I sort of stumbled into the world of knitting and crocheting when I was about seven or eight years old. I came across a skinny pair of knitting needles and a ball of string in a box of my mother's old things and asked her if I could give it a go. She never did learn how to knit or crochet, even though she came from a family of fabulous needlewomen. One day not long after that my grandmother's sister came to visit and brought her knitting along. I was fascinated by the whole process of turning balls of yarn into things that were usable or wearable. My great-aunt gave me some instruction on the spot, and a ratty old how-to book. Every once in a while I'd get a skein of yarn from the dimestore and attempt to learn a new pattern or make something for my dolls. The book also had crocheting instructions. I had no crochet hook, so bent a bobby pin into one and taught myself how to crochet from the book's pictures. Got good enough to make potholders and such for selling at the school PTA bazaar. Stopped both knitting and crocheting for many years because I was inundated with crocheted fishnet vests and shawls from various aunts and ripple and granny square afghans from my grandmother. Picked it up again in college as a meditative hobby, and that's when I started making my first sweaters, big simple garter stitch sweaters without much shaping and in stripes of bright colors. Have pretty much never stopped knitting ever since. Crocheting fell by the wayside until this past winter, when I used it along with knitting in a great big free-form afghan. Most recently I crocheted a Market Bag designed by my daughter-in-law Amy Maxwell, a very talented professional crocheter and pattern designer. Her site is at Strand Over Fist. I used medium weight cotton twine from Ace hardware and the result is a bag sturdy enough for my laptop!

11 April 2010

So It's Dawned on Me...

...that I haven't painted for a bit, nor have I gardened, in spite of the unquestionably springlike weather of the past two weeks. These are passions I haven't been able to act upon because of the demands of the cookery. Yet I am not making enough money with the cookery to just coast a little. It is quite physically demanding, on my feet a lot, and stooped over counters and sinks and my hands and arms get tired from the chopping and stirring and lifting. I like the work, it's not bad as jobs go, but something's gotta give pretty soon. Consequently, I am in the process of thinking and planning, figuring out a way to restore some balance in my life and quite possibly improve all the elements, including health and income. More later....